A Year Later, No Progress on West Virginia Ammunitions Plant

Nearly a year ago, executives with Ranger Scientific LLC announced plans to bring a large industrial facility to a reclaimed surface mine site in West Virginia.

Several state officials, mostly Republicans, spoke at the event and touted the pro-business legislative agenda they said helped attract the ammunitions manufacturing project near Belle.

But a year later, Scott Stansfield, manager of Quincy Coal Company, which owns the site that would host the plant, tells the Charleston Gazette-Mail that the land has not been sold to the developers, though talks are ongoing.

Kanawha County Commissioner Kent Carper said though he still communicates with company representatives regularly, there’s no progress to report.

Both Stansfield and Carper deferred further questions to Daniel Pearlson, the company’s CEO.

The newspaper reports that Pearlson declined an interview.

Alpha Natural Resources Announces Layoffs Just Before the Holidays

Alpha Natural Resources continues to scale back its coal-mining operations.

Workers were told Friday at mines in West Virginia and Virginia that they were being laid off. The total in both states is more than 160, with the majority occurring in West Virginia, according to media reports.

Alpha cited a soft market for its coal in announcing the so-called reduction in force at four West Virginia mines. They’re in Raleigh and Boone counties.

In Virginia, 25 workers were laid off in Tazewell County.

Alpha plans to end operations at 23 properties in West Virginia, Virginia and Kentucky, among others. It’s part of a bankruptcy restructuring.

Remembering The Farmington Mine Disaster 47 Years Later

Nov. 20 marks the anniversary of the 1968 Farmington Mine Disaster, which killed 78 men. It was the worst U.S. mine disaster in 50 years. On Sunday, a crowd of about 150 people gathered at the memorial of the Farmington Mine Disaster. Many, like Aida Mainella Everhart, were there to remember their family members who died 47 years ago. “It was the explosion heard round the world, and we’ll never forget it. And we’ll never forget my dad, David Mainella.”

 

Sharon Clelland was 5 years old when the explosion killed her father, David Cartwright. She points out that one year after the Farmington disaster, Congress passed the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1968.

“If it wasn’t for this disaster, the mine and safety act probably would not even exist,” Clelland said.
 

“I have a son that’s in the coal mines today, I have a niece that’s in the coal mines. Technology of today is 100 percent better than it was in 1968, but you never stop worrying. Never.”

Clelland and her family have been attending the annual memorial service in Farmington for years. For the past eight years, Sharon has been singing the national anthem and “Amazing Grace”. Her raw, powerful voice echoes against the mountain ridge when she sings. It was her dad, David Cartwright, who taught her how to sing, just before he died.

Last November, a new civil lawsuit was filed on behalf of the families of the 78 victims of the Farmington Mine Disaster against Consolidation Coal Company.

Alpha Sends WARN Notice to 400+ W.Va. Employees

Alpha Natural Resources expects to idle a West Virginia coal mine that employs more than 400 workers. In a press release, Alpha said it notified 439…

Alpha Natural Resources expects to idle a West Virginia coal mine that employs more than 400 workers. 

In a press release, Alpha said it notified 439 workers Friday that it expects to idle Rockspring Development’s Camp Creek underground mine and processing plant in Wayne County.

 
Last week, Alpha cut 71 jobs at four mines in Kentucky and Virginia.

The Bristol, Virginia-based company attributes the cuts to weak demand for coal both in the U.S. and overseas, depressed prices and government regulations that are quote causing electric utilities to close existing coal-fired power plants and forego construction of new coal-fired capacity end quote.
 
Alpha chairman and CEO Kevin Crutchfield says that the actions are difficult but necessary to align production with reduced demand.
 
Alpha operates mines in West Virignia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Wyoming, supplying met coal to steel companies and thermal coal to power generators. 

House Judiciary Looks at Coal Jobs and Safety Act of 2015

House Judiciary took up a bill Tuesday that addresses mine safety. Senate Bill 357, also known as House Bill 2566, is the Coal Jobs and Safety Act of 2015. This is a big bill with many provisions, and House Judiciary considered a handful of amendments to it.

There were two amendments to the bill that stirred up some debate within the House Judiciary Committee. Amendment number 2, as the delegates called it, was an amendment proposed by Delegate Woody Ireland of Ritchie County.

Ireland’s amendment addresses when and how and who moves equipment within a coal mine. This amendment adjusts some language related to energized trolley wire, which is a way for miners to move large loads of equipment in shuttle cars.

Delegate Tim Manchin of Marion County proposed a rival amendment to Ireland’s. In Manchin’s amendment, which was referred to as amendment number 4, it suggests putting the language back in the bill that is currently law saying there would be restrictions on how the equipment would be moved.

Manchin called Ireland’s amendment a roll back in mine safety.

“This is a huge roll back in miner safety to take seventy some mines out of the control of this statute to say that seventy some mines will now be allowed to move oversized equipment with motors and other apparatuses that are being strained to their limits in carrying that equipment, to remove those from the provisions and to subject coal miners to being in by of those where they’re going to be exposed to those fumes and fire and all the noxious smoke that comes off of that is an outrage,” Manchin said, “It is a roll back in coal miner safety, it should not be permitted, that we have not been given any adequate excuse to do that, and therefore we should reject this. Men have died, men died to get this statute passed, men died after this statute was passed. Nine men, in Marion and Monongalia County died, I think it was in the 60s or early 70s if I’m not mistaken, because, for this statute, and now we’re going to remove that.”

Delegate Stephen Skinner of Jefferson County, a fellow sponsor of Manchin’s amendment, also spoke against Ireland’s amendment, number 2.

“The amendment offered by the gentleman across applies to a very narrow number of mines,” Skinner said, “The statute as it is right now applies to all mines and is safety focused. We should make the choice for making decisions based on evidence, and we don’t have that evidence here today.”

Delegate Patrick Lane of Kanawha County supported Ireland’s amendment, explaining that amendment number 2 was a good middle-ground and still addressed all the safety concerns.

“The gentleman from Ritchie has offered, what I would consider to be a balanced approach to making sure that miners in most of the mines where there’s a real safety issue with the movement of equipment are protected, but at the same time allowing that equipment to be moved in an efficient manner,” Lane noted, “and I would just remind people to look at the language that it says that a qualified person has to be in charge of transporting it, and specifically, as we heard yesterday, the primary issue is the energized wire that can create the problem, the real safety issue, and I think the gentleman has addressed that specifically, and would ask the committee to adopt amendment number 2 offered by the gentleman from Ritchie and reject amendment number 4.”

After the debate however, Ireland’s amendment passed, and Manchin’s amendment was rejected.

Two more amendments were proposed by Delegates Manchin and Skinner; one having to do with the diesel commission and inspections, while the other had to do with rail track variants from the face of a mine. Both amendments were rejected.

Senate Bill 357 now reports to the floor for its consideration.

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